Genocide suspect to go home
2009-07-09 14:22
Stockholm - A Rwandan national accused of taking part in the 1994 genocide will be extradited from Sweden to Rwanda to face trial, the Swedish government said on Thursday.
Sylvere Ahorugeze, a 53-year-old former director of Rwanda's civil aviation authority, will be extradited within three weeks of Rwandan prosecutors formally receiving the Swedish decision, the government said in its decision.
"The government has today decided to extradite to Rwanda a Rwandan citizen suspected of genocide in 1994," Justice Minister Beatrice Ask said.
"Sweden is the first country in Europe to extradite a suspected genocide criminal to Rwanda. This has not been an easy decision," she said.
Held in custody
Sweden's Supreme Court ruled on May 27 that Ahorugeze could return home to stand trial, saying there was nothing in Swedish or European law that prevents someone suspected of genocide from being extradited.
Ahorugeze, who has been a refugee in Denmark since 2001, was arrested in July 2008 after he was recognised at the Rwandan embassy in neighbouring Sweden.
The Rwandan government demanded his extradition a month later.
He has been held in custody since July 16, 2008.
Ahorugeze is suspected of having been one of the leaders of the Hutu extremists involved in the genocide.
Fair trial
He is also believed to have murdered 28 Tutsis in a suburb of the Rwandan capital Kigali on April 7, 1994.
Hutu extremists killed some 800 000 people, mainly minority Tutsis but also some moderate Hutus, during the 100-day genocide.
Human rights groups such as Amnesty International have called on countries not to extradite genocide suspects to Rwanda over fears they will not get a fair trial there.
However, Ask said the Rwandan justice system had made strides in recent years "and as recently as May 2009 new legislation has been adopted that improves the legal system further."